
Research and Markets announces the addition of this new report entitled "Computer Company Strategy & Their New Developments in the Digital Consumer Electronics Market" to its offerings.
This report looks at the area of computer company strategy & their
new developments in the digital consumer electronics market.
At first glance, the incursion of the computer industry onto the turf
of mere gadget makers would seem to violate most of the strategic
tenets expounded by business-school professors, management consultants
and other marketing gurus. Doesn't this represent a move "down the
value chain" into less sophisticated and more commodity-like products?
Aren't corporate managers supposed to stick to businesses in which they
can be either No. 1 or No. 2? Why, after slugging it out in the PC
wars, would Hewlett-Packard, Apple, Dell and Gateway now seek to poach
from the likes of Sony, Panasonic and JVC?
Computer-industry executives insist their embrace of consumer
electronics is a bold move aimed at hastening the convergence of media,
especially now that devices and data both speak the same language, the
zeroes and ones of digital code. Besides, the PC makers note, they
already have vast experience in markets that feature relentlessly
declining prices and frequent product-upgrade cycles. They're adept at
sourcing and assembling components abroad for resale at home and boast
well-developed distribution channels through which to pump wondrous new
assortments of silicon-powered products another, darker truth prevails:
The PC business is mature and its biggest players are desperate for new
sources of growth, even if that means taking on entrenched players in
an equally cutthroat business. There is no strategic logic or
technology logic. PC companies just have to go somewhere.
Much of the talk about growth opportunities in consumer electronics is
aimed at masking the slowdown in sales of PCs and peripheral products.
The computer industry does not see a lot of transforming technologies"
that could bail it out. The announcement that Dell and H-P have joined
the Blu-ray group also underscores how aggressively computer makers are
forging into consumer electronicsq-even in standard-setting.
Consider these statistics: US household penetration of PCs has reached
nearly 80% and isn't likely to grow much more, even by the industry's
own reckoning. Gartner Group predicts global PC sales will rise 13.9%
this year, to 187 million units. That follows increases of 11% last
year and 2.7% in 2002, and a decrease of 4.6% in 2001. Factor in
persistent price declines, and the four-year record suggests PCs hardly
are a robust business.
Meanwhile, dollar sales of all consumer electronics are projected to
rise by a scant 5% in 2004, versus 2% last year, according to the
Consumer Electronics Association. And that's despite the relative
infancy of newer products such as plasma TVs, MP3 players and digital
cameras.
Gateway has gone furthest in introducing its own line of non-PC
products, perhaps because of its persistent loss of PC market share and
its mixed success to date with retail stores and online sales. The
company, which lost $526 million, or $1.62 a share, last year on sales
of $3.4 billion, has introduced more than 100 new products, including
11 plasma or liquid-crystal-display televisions, several digital
cameras, camcorders, MP3 music players and DVD player-recorders.
Hewlett-Packard last August declared its heightened interest in
consumer electronics with a rollout of 158 products grandly dubbed "Big
Bang 2." The strategy is heavily tilted toward H-P's strength in
imaging and printing, and is designed to drive further use of
consumables such as paper and toner. In other words, the effort extends
the H-P brand but fits snugly within the company's existing business
model.
But its foray into consumer electronics has been more dramatic, relative to both the size of the company.
Notably, all four PC makers have relied on a retail presence to raise
customer awareness of their innovations. Gateway opened its first store
in 1996 and later expanded to more than 300 units before paring back to
a current 190 locations then shuttering those after the eMachines
acquisition, which should allow it to secure shelf space at electronic
retailers.
Apple has a handful of stores, mostly in malls that cater to affluent
shoppers, that are Meccas for Mac-heads. The stores celebrate and
promote the company's hip, sleek products. Dell has placed
demonstration kiosks in selected malls for several years, and H-P has
joined with Microsoft to create displays in certain electronics stores
to spotlight its line of "Media Center PCs."
Many PCs made by Dell, H-P, Gateway and others run on Intel Pentium 4
processors and Microsoft's Windows XP Media Center system. They enable
live-TV viewing and include DVD players, TiVo-style personal video
recorders and software for digital-music downloading and photo
management.
The media PC-a middle ground between standard PCs and consumer
electronics -- could be where the PC giants are pinning their hopes.
The media-center PC is the key devices of the conflict between
traditional CE companies like Sony and Philips and the traditional
computer-box makers. Indeed, the Silicon Valley has prophesied about
the coming convergence of PCs and TVs, not to mention other
data-delivery devices.
But the evidence suggests that media heaven will have to wait. The day
won't come when you don't need a PC. Apple CEO Steve Jobs also is on
record stating his disbelief that the PC and TV eventually will meld
into a single product. Nor have consumers shown much interest to date
in "single-box, single-brand" solutions, which could pose an obstacle
to broader acceptance of media PCs.
In their headlong rush to seize market share from traditional
consumer-electronics firms, the PC makers face another, more immediate
obstacle: A Windows-based machine must be booted up, more often than
not, a time-devouring process. Too, PCs -- ours, anyway -- are prone to
crash, rarely a problem with TVs and DVD players.
PC-component makers are apt to benefit under almost any scenario.
"Regardless of how content is delivered. That means semiconductor
chips, storage technology and operating systems will be in growing
demand, at least in the short term.
Apple's biggest advantage is its knack for making products that are
easier to use than the competition's, a desirable skill in the
mainstream consumer market. Apple seems to have hit upon an excellent
strategy, virtually creating two new businesses in iPod and iTunes,
though its ultimate success will depend on the company's ability to
drive sales of Macintosh computers and its OSX operating system.
Ultimately, there's no good way to handicap a contest in which so many
companies are poaching each others' markets in search of incremental
growth. Though some might develop more successful products and win more
market share, the sum total of new revenue won't be enough to satisfy
all contenders.
This report is available in either the Japanese or English language.
For a complete index of this report click
here.